The defendants J. F. Barton Contracting Company and United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company appeal from a jury verdict and award in favor of the plaintiff Brookhaven Landscaping & Grading Company, Inc., in the amount of $39,045.50. The substance of Brookhaven’s diversity claim now on appeal is that Barton breached an oral agreement to pay for excavating work in excess of work Brookhaven had аlready agreed to perform under the terms of a subcontract. 1 With one minor exception we affirm the judgment entered by the district court.
On February 16, 1978, Barton entered a contract with the City of Atlanta for the construction of a portion of a road at the William B. Hartsfield Atlanta International Airport. On March 22, Barton entered a subcontract with Brookhaven for three items of work required under the prime сontract. The primary portion of the subcontract consisted of excavation, embankment, and grading work to prepare the road segment for pavement. The subcontract, like the prime contract, incorporated the plans and specifications of the project. 2 Brookhaven was responsible for removing rocks and boulders from the planned roadbed. The engineеrs’ plans for the project state at one point that: “The Contractor is cautioned that the Loop Road shall be constructed on an existing boulder fill from Station 36 + 00 to 40 + 50.” 3 Brookhaven contended at trial that the drawings accompanying this cautionary instruction indicate that the boulder area began at 36 + 50 and ended at 40 + 00, a distance of 350 feet along the planned roadway instead of 450 feеt. An explanatory note on the drawings states that: “2' Max. Backfill shall have neat line measurement and will be paid for as In Place Embankment in all areas where boulders are encountered in subgrade.” Both parties clearly understood that it was Brookhaven’s duty to remove the boulders and then back-fill the area with up to two feet of earth, as opposed to one foot in all other areаs. The parties also understood that Brookhaven would not be paid for the removal of these boulders as such but would be paid on the basis of the amount of “in place embankment,” or dirt required to fill the roadbed to a depth of two feet in the area where the boulders were excavated. In other words, although Brookhaven was responsible for removing the boulders, it would be paid only on the bаsis of the unit price for the backfill. Brookhaven’s foreman testified that the company factored the price of boulder excavation into the amount it bid for the backfill.
In the course of performing its work Brookhaven encountered boulders over a substantially greater distance of the roadway than was indicated in the engineers’ plans. Don Lawson, the plaintiff’s foreman, testified that once he became aware of boulders in areas other than those indicated on the plans, he stopped work and met with Barton’s vice-president, David L. Barton. Lawson testified that on at least two occasions he told David Barton that Brookhaven had encountered unexpected boulders and that the company would have to be paid extra for removing those boulders. Lawson testified thаt David Barton authorized the removal of the extra boulders and agreed that the defendant would pay for the removal at the rate of $3.25 per cubic yard of boulders. Alan Batson, another of plaintiff’s employees, testified that he was present when David Barton agreed to pay Brookhaven for removing the extra boulders. Barton, however, testified that he considered the boulder excavаtion part of Brookhaven’s original contract obligation and never consented to extra payment.
After completing its job Brookhaven submitted a bill for the total work done, including the extra boulder excavation. Barton paid for the written subcontract items but refused to pay for the boulder removal. The plaintiff brought this lawsuit.
At trial the plaintiff proceeded on the theory that the boulder excavation was not covered under the original contract obligation and that plaintiff had secured an oral contract for the extra work. The plaintiff
The judge instructed the jury that, if it found that the boulder removal was not part of the original obligation, it could then consider whether the evidence supported an oral contract covering the boulder excavation. The judge also instructed the jury on quantum meruit. The jury later returned a general verdict in the exact amount the plaintiff requested for the boulder excavation.
The defendants contend on appeal that the court erroneously denied their motions for verdict n. o. v. and new trial.
II.
At oral argument before this Court counsel for bоth parties demonstrated a basic lack of familiarity with essential portions of the record. When questioned from the bench, neither counsel was able to state whether the district court had ever specifically construed the contract or how the court had instructed the jury on the contract claims. In addition, although counsel for the appellants steadfastly maintained that the defendants hаd objected to the jury instructions on quantum meruit, the record reveals that the charging conference was not recorded and that the defendants did not enter their objections on the record after the jury had been charged and before it had retired. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 51.
The rules and practice of appellate litigation presuppose a high degree of familiarity with the district court record. Rule 22(f)(7) of this Court’s Rules requires that the briefs of the parties contain an accurate statement of the course of proceedings and disposition in the court below, supported by reference to the volume and page number of the record. Eleventh Cir.R. 22(f)(7); see Fed.R.App.P. 28(aX3). Rule 22(a) requires that portions of the record be reproduced in an appendix captioned “Record Excerpts.” Eleventh Cir.R. 22(a). Of necеssity, each attorney must be very familiar with the record in order to comply with these rules and answer questions from the bench concerning the record.
It is the responsibility of counsel representing both appellant and appellee to discuss intelligently any portion of the record which may be relevant to a disposition of the issues on appeal. It is not an adequate response that attorneys for the parties on appeal did not participate in the trial of the case. All counsel participating in oral argument before this Court are fully responsible for the record of the case. The arguing attorney must be able to answer all relevant questions or, at the very least, have present at counsel table an attorney who is able to answer questions concerning the proceedings in the district court.
III.
On this appeal the defendants first argue that the boulder excavation was clearly covered by the provisions of the written subcontract. Because the plaintiff was under a preexisting duty to remove the boulders, the defendants argue, the oral contract failed for lack of consideration. The plaintiff contends that the contract plans designated a very limited area in which boulders were to be encountered. The plans called for the removal of approximately 1,000 cubic yards of boulders over a distance of 450 feet. What the plaintiff encountered, however, was approximately
Section 101.26 of the Georgia Department of Transportation Standard Specifications, incorporated as part of the prime and subcontracts, defines extra work as: “An item of work not provided for in the Contract as awarded but found essential to the satisfactory completion of the Contract within its intended scope.” Section 104.04 provides that:
The Contractor shall perform unforeseen work, for which there is no price included in the Contract, whenever it is neсessary or desirable in order to complete fully the work as contemplated. Such work shall be performed in accordance with the Specifications and as directed, and will be paid for as provided in 109.05.
Section 109.05 provides that:
Extra work, as defined in 101.26 when ordered in accordance with 104.04, will be authorized in writing by a Supplemental Agreement. In all cases such agreements shall be made before Extra Work is started.
The Supplemental Agreement will stipulate the work to be done and the basis of payment. (Lump Sum, Unit Price or Force Account.)
The supplemental agreement provisions of the Standard Specifications were construed by the Georgia Supreme Court in
Department of Transportation v. Claussen Paving Co.,
Brookhaven’s evidence established that it encountered substantially more boulders than shown in the contract plans and contemplated by the parties at the time they signed the subcontract. Because Brookhaven had to remove the extra boulders in order to prepare a proper foundation for the road, Brookhaven’s performance was substantially altered. In this case, unlike Claussen, Brookhaven maintained that it did secure a supplemental agreement at a specified price for the extra work. Although defendants disputed the existence of the oral contract at trial, they now concede that the evidence of the agreement was sufficient to go to the jury.
The jury could have fоund that the excavation of those boulders in excess of the amount anticipated in the contract plans was in fact extra work as provided for in the specifications, and therefore could have formed the consideration for the supplemental agreement.
Claussen, supra; Excavators & Erectors, Inc. v. Bullard Engineers, Inc.,
We hold, however, that the plaintiff was only entitled to seek a supplemental agreement for excavation of boulders in excess of those shown in the area designated in the plans and necessary for the completion of its grading obligation. The plans caution that boulders may be encountered between stations 36 + 00 and 40 + 50. Brookhaven, therefore, was responsible under its written subcontract for all boulder removal between these points. The claim for boulder excavation between stations 40 + 00 and 40 + 50, a distance of 50 feet, is contradicted by the clear terms of the plans. Brookhaven’s claim for this 50 feet, part оf its 12,014 cubic yard calculation, is not supported by substantial evidence. The cautionary instruction is clear on its face; the cross-hatching relied on by Brookhaven to shorten the distance is merely illustrative. The record reflects that 527.22 cubic yards of boulders were removed between stations 40 + 00 and 40 + 50. At $3.25 per cubic yard, the total recovery for this portion of the roadway was $1713.47. The plaintiff’s award should bе reduced by that amount. 5
The defendants next raise the issue of whether the subcontract may be supplemented by oral as opposed to written agreement. The contract specifications require written modification, but defendants admit that this requirement may be waived.
See
Ga.Code Ann. § 20-116;
Smith v. General Finance Corp.,
Barton further contends that it was entitled to judgment notwithstanding the verdict on Brookhaven’s claim in
quantum meruit.
Having determined that the evidence was sufficient to allow the jury to determine that the boulder excavation was extra work not required by the terms of the subcontract, we reject the defendants’ contention that the jury should not have been allowed to consider this alternative basis of recovery. The Georgia Supreme Court has held that recovery in
quantum meruit
is appropriate in cases such as this one when the required performance falls outside the terms of the original obligation and when the evidence does not support a supplemental agreement.
Department of Transporta
IV.
Barton finally asserts four arguments to support its contention that the district court erred by denying its motion for a new trial. The denial of a motion for a new trial will be reversed only upon a showing of clear abuse of discretion by the trial court.
Reyes v. Wyeth Laboratories,
The district court did not err, as Barton suggests, by allowing the plaintiff’s foreman to testify on the custom of the construction industry in Atlanta regarding the removal of unanticipated rock and boulders. Georgia law allows evidence of known and established usage to aid in the construction of contracts. Ga.Code Ann. § 20-704;
Puritan Mills, Inc. v. Pickering Construction Co.,
Similarly, the district court did not err in allowing Brookhaven to introduce a chart of the road segment which depicted the areas of anticipated and unanticipated boulders in green and red coloring. The court had already heard testimony substantiating the accuracy of the depiction and there was no challenge to its technical correctness. As a result, the drawing was properly introduced to aid in the understanding of previously introduced testimony.
Patton v. Archer,
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED except as to the reduction in the plaintiff’s award in the amount of $1713.47. We instruct the district court to enter judgment accordingly.
Notes
. Brookhaven sought recovery for several other items of work, but the jury award was only for the amount Brookhaven claimed for extra excavation.
. In this case the plans were drawn and approved by the Atlanta Airport Engineers. The specifications consisted of Contract Specifications for Contract 52, sometimes referred to as the "Grey Book,” and the Georgia Department of Transportation Standard Specifications, sometimes referred to as the “Yellow Book.” The specifiсations classified and defined the type of work to be done.
. “Stations” are designations of intervals which appear on the plans and are staked out at the project. The distance between stations is measured in hundred feet. Thus the distance from 36 + 00 to 40 + 50 is 450 feet.
. The Eleventh Circuit has adopted the case law of the former Fifth Circuit as its governing body of precedent.
Bonner v. City of Prichard,
. The figures come from plaintiffs exhibit 11 and the testimony of Don Lawson and Alan Batson.
. Barton argues elsewhere in its brief that the district court should not have charged the jury on quantum meruit. Because Brookhaven was entitled to present this theory to the jury, the charge was clearly appropriate. We note, however, that counsel for Barton never entered its objections to the charges on the record and did not specify the charges to which he objected after the charges were made but before the jury retired. Fed.R.Civ.P. 51.
